6-year-old killed in collision after family forced to flee Merritt, B.C., due to flooding
CBC
A mother from Merritt, B.C., is reeling from the death of her six-year-old daughter following a highway crash that occurred as the displaced family was travelling to find a safe haven from floods in the southern part of the province.
Ember Young, 6, died on Nov. 18 when the vehicle she was in with her mother and sister collided with a utility vehicle along Highway 97C, south of Logan Lake in B.C.'s Southern Interior.
"She was a sweet, lovable girl, and it's very unfortunate that this had to happen to her because she was just the happiest, sweetest little thing," said her mother, Jordan Goetz Young.
The tragedy illustrates the far-reaching impacts of the catastrophic flooding in British Columbia. In addition to loss of life, highways have been destroyed, farmers' fields have been covered in water and thousands of people have been displaced.
Goetz Young, 32, was already facing tragedy following the death of her estranged husband in August from a drug overdose. She had moved to Merritt from Langley with her two daughters, Ember and five-year-old Hailey, to stay with her parents and start life anew.
But on Nov. 15, her life was once again upended when she and her daughters were forced to flee Merritt, like all residents, due to the failure of the town's water treatment system.
They went to Kamloops and stayed in a hotel, but the cost of the accommodation forced her to make a new plan, which was to go to Lower Nicola, northwest of Merritt, and stay with a friend.
"I was afraid I wasn't going to be able to afford [the hotel], so that's what heavily influenced my decision to go back home," she said.
Driving Highway 5 from Kamloops to Merritt was something Goetz Young had done regularly, but on Nov. 18, the roadway was closed at Merritt, so to get to Lower Nicola she was forced to take Highway 97C, through Logan Lake.
It was just south of that town where she lost control of the vehicle she was in, spun into the oncoming lane and collided with a truck.
"I felt the back end of the car kind of slipping and I felt myself going off the road, and I started to freak out because I saw there was a huge vehicle in the other lane," she said. "I just remember feeling this huge force and I don't ... I got knocked out from the airbag."
When she regained consciousness, Goetz Young looked in the back seat at her two children and saw that Ember was bleeding and unconscious.
"I started to absolutely freak out," she said. "I just remember screaming and begging for help, and a bunch of people came and helped me."
Logan Lake RCMP said the collision occurred just after noon on Nov. 18. Investigators said at the time that there was a head-on collision between a passenger vehicle and a large utility vehicle.